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Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology

Volume 49 | Issue 2 Article 4

1958

Research Interviewing in Prison


Donald J. Newman

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Recommended Citation
Donald J. Newman, Research Interviewing in Prison, 49 J. Crim. L. Criminology & Police Sci. 127 (1958-1959)

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RESEARCH INTERVIEWING IN PRISON

DONALD J. NEWMAN

The author is on the staff of the Department of Sociology in St. Lawrence University, Canton,
New York. During the last three years he has been lecturer on Crime and Delinquency in the Frederick
A. Moran Memorial Institute on Crime and Delinquency which is held annually in his University.
He has done interviewing research in several prisons in Wisconsin, New York and Canada.-EDIToR.

Tom NECESSITY OF IN-PRISON RESEARCH assistants. At the same time, it must be made clear
The necessity for intensive and productive to everyone involved that the Division of Correc-
research in the fields of criminal behavior, juvenile tions or the Department of Social Welfare is not
delinquency and correctional administration is self sponsoring the research. Prison research sponsored
evident. Progress in any field, whether physical or by correctional authorities or conducted by cor-
social, ceases when research is meagre or when it is rectional personnel suffers at the outset from a
conducted in a superficial manner. Who could bias which is difficult to overcome. The orientation
imagine the present status of medical science with- and the possible results are too intimately related
out the intensive physiological and biochemical to the employment of such individuals to be com-
research on which this profession rests? pletely free from scientific criticism. This does
For a number of reasons, some custodial, others not mean that correctional personnel are incapable
bureaucratic, criminological research involving of research or that they might deliberately bias
in-prison populations is neither as frequent nor as their results. Rather, the responses of inmates to
intense as is desirable to provide needed data on the interviewers who stand in an authoritarian posi-
complex problem of criminal behavior. Crimino- tion to them are open to serious questions of re-
logical research involves many approaches and liability and validity.
many techniques; a good deal of data can be The most valid research can be conducted by a
gathered in the community and from the courts. trained outsider who has no axe to grind on any
Records, police as well as correctional and psycho- aspect of correctional structure. This in itself,
logical tests, can be examined and analyzed. ho ever, raises a number of problems in gaining
Nevertheless, a necessary adjunct to other research entrance to work behind the walls. There has
approaches involves interviews with known crim- been some reluctance on the part of wardens and
inals held in custody in our prisons. Many factors other personnel to allow outsiders to enter the
of sociological significance, such as self conception, prison to meet in relative isolation with inmate
levels of aspiration, attitudes and motives of respondents. Reasons given for this reluctance
offenders, can be measured only by carefully generally fall into three general categories: first,
structured in-prison interviewing. While it is true it is argued that the chief function of a prison is
that prison populations are not representative custody and that the entry of an outsider is a
samples of the universe of crime, research among in- potential threat to the prison's safety. Perhaps the
mates is, at the very least, one primary source of research might "disturb" the inmates or perhaps
basic criminological data. calculating prisoners might use the researcher or
the research situation as a method of escape.
THE- NECESSITY OF PERSONNEL COOPERATION This argument, of course, has some validity.
The success of any research conducted within However, it must be pointed out that no known
walls depends very basically upon the mutual instances of prison riots or prison breaks can be
cooperation of the researcher and each of the cor- found which can be attributed to research situa-
rectional personnel, from commissioner tn guard, tions and yet in-prison research by outsiders has
with whom the researcher is working. First of all, been going on since the time of Lombroso. It is
permission to conduct the research must come important, nevertheless, for the warden and others
from the Board or Commissioner of Corrections to make certain that the researcher is well quali-
and must be supported by the wardens and their fied and understands fully the custodial situation
121
DONALD J. NREWMAN [Vol. 49

and his position in it. Certainly no director of a administration of the prison. This does not mean
hospital would allow an unqualified person to con- that the scientific researcher should, if it is in the
duct medical research but at the same time, few nature of his project, disregard or suppress any
hospital directors who are dedicated to the al- data which might be negative to prison practices.
leviation of disease would refuse to cooperate with The researcher is dedicated to objectivity and to
qualified research personnel. maintaining confidences of respondents and co-
A second argument relating to this reluctance to operating authorities. He must report his data as
allow outside researchers to enter the gates has to accurately and as objectively as possible, at the
do with disturbing prison routine. Under present same time maintaining his confidences and refusing
conditions, all prison personnel certainly have to single out personel for censure or criticism.
their hands full pursuing daily duties and cannot However, the great bulk of criminological re-
be expected to halt work while research is con- search is totally unconcerned with the administra-
ducted. The researcher should keep this in mind tion of any single prison. The prison and its per-
in designing his study so that a minimum of dis- sonnel enter the research picture only insofar as
turbance results. Surely a well designed project they are keepers of the inmates whom the re-
will take this into account. A great deal of pre- searcher desires to study and that their cooperation
liminary research can be done outside the walls and is necessary for successful and accurate research.
from prison records. The interviewing itself re-
CONDITrONS FOR SuccEssruL RESEARcH
quires no more than small office space and possibly
INTERVIEWING IN PRISON
the assistance of one guard. Inmates are inter-
viewed individually, under ordinary circumstances The ultimate success of any research project
and, with careful planning, no more than one depends upon the accuracy with which data are
man per shop should be absent from his work at gathered. Elaborate analyses or well-written re-
any one time. The inmate merely reports for the ports are irrelevant unless they are based upon
interview and following it he returns to his job. reliable and valid information gathered from the
The whole interviewing process should cause less research source. Any competent researcher is very
disturbance in prison routine than a daily sick careful that the instruments he uses, such as his
call. questionnaires, scales, or schedules, are as precise
A third argument against such research which is as.possible. He thinks through his objectives care-
sometimes given is that the research does not fully; with equal care he builds his hypotheses and
benefit the prison in any way. The study may have constructs his interviewing forms. He pretests and
no conceivable relevance to improving opera- possibly pre-codes. However, all of his work is in
tional procedure or to any other immediate need vain unless he is equally careful in conducting the
the warden may have. Much prison research is, or interviews he needs or in administering his tests.
can be, basic and theoretical. The goal of crim- THE SETTING OF THE INTERVIEW
inological research is not only to discover immedi- In-prison interviewing presents a number of
ate or "practical" information but to build a solid problems not encountered in other types of re-
foundation of data about criminal behavior on search interviewing. In all sociological, psycho-
which the whole science of criminology, and ul- logical, and case-work interviewing the actual set-
timately the profession of penology, rests. Again ting of the interview is considered of primary
the analogy between criminological research and importance in building rapport and in obtaining
medical research can be drawn. Many, if not most, reliable responses. Attention to the selection of the
important medical discoveries originated from setting is particularly important within a prison.
what was, at the time, impractical and even far- In order to dearly emphasize the distinct nature
fetched research. of the research project from all things custodial,
Underlying the objections of correctional per- the location of the interview should be in a "neu-
sonnel to outside research there sometimes ap- tral" or favorable part of the prison.' Preferably
pears a fear, even if never expressed, that the re- the interviewing should take place in an empty
search or possible publicity following it might
hurt the prison or jeopardize the jobs of various I See LEwIs ANrnoN DExTER, Role Relationships
and Conceptions of Neutrality in Interiewing. AmaER.
prison employees. It should be remembered by JOUR. OF SocIoL., Vol. LXII, No. 2, Sep., 1956, pp
both correctional employees and by the investi- 153-157 and ELEANOR AND NATHAN MACCOBY, The
Interview: A Tool of Social Science in GARDNER LIND-
gators themselves that criminological research is zEy (ed.), HANDBOOK OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY Cam-
not concerned with exposing inadequacies in the bridge, Mass.: Addison-Wesley, 1954)
INTERVIEWING IN PRISON

office in the prison school, library, doctor's office Even before, or certainly while explaining the
or guidance center. Certainly the use of any cus- research project, the researcher should dearly
todial employee's office should be avoided. Like- identify himself and emphasize the fact that he is
wise, where possible, the interview should not totally unrelated to the prison administration and
be conducted in the psychiatrist's or psychologist's that any information divulged by the inmate will
offices in order to dearly distinguish the research be held in strict confidence and will not be dis-
situation from the more familiar psychiatric cussed with any of the prison staff nor for that
interviews. matter with anyone else. It is perhaps a good idea
The interview setting should be as comfortable for those researchers who have university affilia-
as possible and preferably in a quiet and relatively tion to carry with them a staff directory or univer-
isolated office. The interview should be business- sity bulletin so that any doubting inmates may
like, and free from any interruptions. The re- look up their name and position. While this does
spondent and interviewer should be the only per- not really prove identity, it has been found helpful
sons in the room during the interview although it by this writer and seems to be sufficient evidence
may be necessary to have a guard stationed outside for most inmates. As Dexter has said-"The role
the door and out of earshot. The guard serves not assigned to the interviewer by the informant will
only as a security measure but may appreciably be in terms of the informant's conception of the
aid the interviewing situation by sending for interviewer's group affiliations." 3
respondents when they are needed and maintain- Vital to rapport development and the ultimate
ing order should an inmate have to wait for a few reliability of the data obtained is frankness con-
minutes until the interviewer can see him. cerning the relationship of the interview to the
inmate's particular case. It must be strongly em-
BUILDING RAPPORT IN PRISON INTERVIEWS phasized that the interview and the total results
of the research project will have no effect in miti-
The question of rapport development in research
gating the inmate's sentence, in increasing his
interviews is ordinarily somewhat different than
chance for parole, or in any other way acting as a
in case-work or psychiatric interviewing which
direct benefit to him. Conversely, the interview or
may involve a long series of interviews with the
project will have no harmful effect on his record.
•same respondent. In sociological research, one or
If, under such conditions, he sees no incentive for
two interviews with a respondent is sometimes
cooperation, long-range effects of such research
sufficient, although the actual number of inter-
may.be pointed out to him as well as illustrations of
views and lengths of each depend upon the nature
general progress in criminology and penology re-
of the project. This means that to obtain reliable
sulting from just such research as the present
responses, rapport of adequate intensity must be
project.
developed rapidly. Obviously, mutual trust and
confidence is somewhat more difficult to come by The information sought in the interview should
when the respondent is incarcerated and when he is be elicited as naturally as possible to build and
seemingly arbitrarily summoned for an interview maintain rapport throughout the interviewing
that he knows little or nothing about. Conse- period. Any questions should be frankly answered
quently, the researcher must be prepared to suc- and the respondent should be freely allowed to see
cintly familiarize the inmate with the -purposes of what notes have been taken. Again, in recording
the research in terms that he can comprehend and notes during the interview, the confidential nature
to seek his voluntary assistance. It is not neces- of the project should be stressed. The problems of
sary, of course, to explain fully the hypotheses recording in-prison interviews are approximately
underlying the research and it is both unscientific the same as in other types of research. Some in-
and unwise to tell the inmate precisely the data mates show reluctance to have their statements
sought.2 Yet enough information about the project written, possibly because of negative police and
must be explained in order to prevent miscon- court experience, but others are only too eager to
ceptions and damaging yard rumors. speak "for the record." Cressey has used a variety
2 CaassEY, for example, successfully concealed the 4
of recording techniques with evident success.
theory underlying his research with embezzlers.
DONALD R. CRESSEY, OTHER PEOPLES MONEY: A Notes, schedules, and other forms should be kept
STUDY ON THE SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY OF EMBEZZLE- securely filed by the researcher at all times and
mENT, Glencoe, Illinois: The Free Press, 1953, p. 25. 3
See also ALFRED LINDESMITH, OPIATE ADDICTION, DEXTER, op. cit. p 153.
(Bloomington, Indiana: Principia Press, 1947) p 6. 4 CPESSEY, op. cit. pp 24-26.
DONALD J. NEWMAN [Vol. 49

no final typing or coding should be done by SPECIAL PROBLEMS OF ARGOT


prison personnel.
Prison slang and other variations in criminal
The entire deportment of the researcher should
argot inevitably present a problem to the in-
be above reproach during the extent of the total
prison researcher. Obviously, the interviewer must
research project. He must bear in mind that he is
clearly and accurately understand the responses
seeking to obtain reliable information from a more
of his sample in order to gather valid data and the
or less initially hostile population. To gain and
peculiar language variations of many inmates
maintain inmates' confidence and to prevent harm-
presents a real challenge. In general, argot en-
ful grapevine rumors that might destroy his
countered in prison interviewing falls into five
work, he should remain as aloof as possible from
categories: first, slang concerning incarceration,
prison personnel even during the off-hours of
prison routines and prison personnel and this may
lunch and evenings.
include terms common only to one specific prison;
SPECIAL PROBLEMS OF INTERVIEWING ORDER second, inmate terms for various legal processes
The skilled researcher should give some thought and types of sentence; third, argot common to
to the order in which he interviews his sample. If certain types of offenses and offenders varying
possible, he should check with prison personnel from terms used by burglars to the language of
concerning the reputation of the first few respond- confidence men; fourth, argot common to sex
ents. He should avoid beginning his project by practices and sexual deviations; and last, argot
summoning unpopular or sexually deviant in- common to various vices which sometime accom-
mates in order to prevent his study from being pany crime like gambling and narcotic addiction.
negatively defined in the yard before it has a These variations, of course, are in addition to
chance to begin operating. He should try to start ordinary slang differences created by the usual
with "average" inmates in terms of type of amount of social distance which exists between the
offense for which sentenced, length of sentence interviewer and his respondents. Many inmates
and so on. This does not mean that all his respond- are slum-produced and the ordinary "jive-talk" of
ents should be these "average" inmates; he is the slum is often unfamiliar in the academic world
bound to interview his sample without such arbi- of the researcher. The interviewer should familiar-
trary substitution. However, he should keep in ize himself as much as possible with these argots
mind what is probably the most unique char- which he may do by asking correctional authori-
acteristic of prison research, namely the fact that ties, reading a number of unofficial glossaries of
most or all members of his sample know one various slangs, and, of course, by asking the mean-
another, share with one another certain senti- ing of terms when he encounters them in the
ments, orientations and experiences of prison interview.
existence and will undoubtedly communicate with It is ordinarily not necessary nor desirable for a
one another and quite probably will collectively researcher to be able to talk like a confidence man,
evaluate the research project before it has really yet as anthropological research must take place
begun. 5 It is, therefore, important that the first in the language of the culture being studied, so the
few respondents carry back to the yard a straight prison researcher should make an effort to learn at
story of the research project and it is equally im- least some of the basic "criminalese" encountered
portant that their in-prison reputations are such in his work. 6 Frequent interruptions to clarify
that the project can be evaluated accurately by terms damage rapport and the strained, often
other inmates. erroneous use of argot by the interviewer may
If the research is concerned with gathering facts destroy rapport completely. As Kinsey has
about the crimes for which the inmates have been pointed out, there is considerable variation in the
sentenced, it would seem advisable to pay some use of vernacular terms by locale, by racial groups,
attention to the interviewing order of men sen- and between generations,7 and the interviewing
tenced as partners in their crime. If, by careful structure must be flexible enough to bridge mis-
scheduling, one partner is prevented from com- understanding. The rigid techniques of question-
municating with the other partner following the 6 See, for example, the excellent description of the
interview, a crude measure of reliability can be had. role necessarily assumed by the interviewer in DONALD
RASMUSSEN Prisoner Opinions About Parole AMER.
I For a similar situation see MAURICE LEZNOFF, SOCIOL. REV., Vol. 5, No. 4, Aug., 1940, pp 589-590.
Inler'iewing Homosexuals AMER. JoUR. OF SOCIOL., 7ArYED KINSEY and others, SEXUAL BEIIAVIOR IN
Vol. LXII, No. 2, Sep., 1956, pp 202-204. THE HUMAN MALE, New York: Saunders, 1948, p 52.
19581 INTERVIEWING IN PRISON

naires and directed interviews leave something In addition to study design and interviewing
to be desired in research with prison populations; technique, many other methods have been de-
accurate understanding can be developed best in veloped to check validation, such as comparing
an interview situation. As Caplow has said: "The results of data with subsequent events, compari-
expert interviewer is much more than a recording son of results with other, similar research, com-
device. No matter what the form of the interview, paring pre-testing results with final results, validat-
he should pursue his questioning to the point ing data against judgement of experts, repeated
8
where no significant ambiguities exist for him." check interviewing and so on." As far as research
with inmates is concerned, if Caplow's hypothesis
PROBLEMS oF RELI_43ILITY AND VALIDITY IN
that ". . . being interviewed is an inherently satis-
PRISON RESEARCH
fying experience and ordinarily constitutes its
Fortunately, information from in-prison inter- own goal"' 2 is correct, the components of this hy-
views is, in some ways, easier to check for relia- pothesis, escape from boredom, attention, a
bility than interviews taken "in the open." Each chance to express one's views and the other satis-
inmate has an extensive dossier containing a good factions received by the interviewee will be even
deal of pertinent information about his back- stronger motives for free and frank conversation in
ground, criminal record and so on. Many times inmate interviewing. Coupled with the opportuni-
modern prison records contain statements in the ties for the researcher to use already compiled
inmate's own words regarding his past life, the records of many facets of his respondents' lives,
conditions surrounding his criminal career, his re- the entire in-prison situation seems to lend itself to
lationship with authorities, his parents and others a degree of accuracy and methods of reliability
who know him. In short, a brief but verbatim check not afforded in many other types of research.
autobiography exists. This is, of course, in addition
to test results, investigator's reports, court records, THE ETHICAL POSITION OF THE PRISON
psychologists' summaries and the other com- RESEARCHER
ponents of penal records. Certainly these are indis- Successful interviewing necessitates a confi-
pensible as a reliability check on interviewing data. dential relationship between interviewer and
Truthfulness of responses is not a problem respondent of the same intensity as doctor-patient
peculiar to prison research, but is an issue in all or lawyer-client relationships. However, the social
projects involving interviewing. Probably because researcher-respondent situation is not privileged
"imprisonment" and "dishonesty" are popularly in the law to the same extent as are these other
related conceptions, doubts concerning data from relationships. Nevertheless, to be assured of re-
inmates are more often expressed than doubts of liable data, research interviewers inevitably inform
data from, say, public opinion polling. There is, of their respondents that all information will be held
course, no absolute way of measuring the degree in confidence but often qualify this assurance by
of honesty in expressed attitudes, or sincerity, or explaining that data will be used "only in a statis-
the accuracy of recalled emotions. Nevertheless, all tical way" or that all identifying information will
possible methods of validation should be used, be concealed. Presumably, this assurance of con-
and, of course, care should be taken in the design fidence extends to any information gathered in the
of the study and the interviewing techniques to interviewing situation even if it is not actively
assure in advance research situations in which sought and is irrelevant to the particular research
honesty and accuracy can be engendered. Merton, problem.
for example, has claimed that the focused interview In dealing with inmates, the researcher is in a
is the best technique for validly measuring sub- position where, inadvertently perhaps, he might be
jective experiences such as attitudes and emo- informed of unsolved crimes, of plans to disturb
tional responses9 and Young reports the successful prison routine or to break jail, of corruption among
10
use of an oral interviewing guide. guards, or of vice within the walls. The issue he
8THEODORE CAPLOW, The Dynamics of Information then faces is whether to ignore the information,
Inter-o'iing AMxER. JOUR. oF SocIOL., Vol. LXII, No. inform prison or police authorities, or to personally
2, Sep., 1956, p 167.
9ROBERT MERTON, MARJORIE FIsKE and PAxRiCiA idscourage any inmate who reveals such informa-
L. KENDALL, THE FocusED INTERvIEw Glencoe: The
Free Press, 1956 " For a discussion of validation techniques see
10PAULINE V. YOUNG, Scientific Study of Young, MILDRED PARTEN, SURVEYS,' POLLS AND SAMPLES,
Occasional, Urban Male Offenders AMER. SOcIOL. REV., New York: Harper, 1950, pp 486-498.
p 169.
12 CAPLOW, op. Cil.,
Vo. 5, No. 4, Aug., 1940, p 596-600.
DONALD J. NEWMAN [Vol. 49

tion from actively participating in the illegal or types of behavior and variations in law-breaking
disruptive activity. The answer, should such a in addition to those represented in prison samples.
dilemma occur, cannot be arbitrarily formulated. Techniques in criminological research include de-
Each situation must be judged as it occurs and the vices other than the interview. Nevertheless, face-
researcher must weigh the factor of his position as to-face sources of data are vital to progress in
a law-abiding citizen against his scientist's role of any science of human behavior. Donald Taft has
keeping confidences. An understanding warden
said that "The hope of ultimate control and pre-
once told me, at the start of a research project,
vention of crime depends upon the future of
that if I should learn of any dangerous or dis-
criminological research"' 1 and research with prison
ruptive plans among the inmates (this was at the
height of the recent prison riot fad), I should inmates can provide, much more than it has,
keep this information to myself. He explained that valuable additions to knowledge about law viola-
his job was custody, mine was not, and that he felt tions. Not all answers can be obtained by inter-
perfectly competent to maintain custody with his viewing inmates; the study of conduct norms, or
own staff. white-collar crimes, statistical analyses of crime
Should an issue arise which involves the possible rates, those rare studies of the ordinary criminal
loss of human life or the commission of another "in the open," and other such research contributes
felony, the researcher must decide as his own to the central body of knowledge. However, in-
conscience and the law to direct. However, any prison interviewing has been chiefly information
prison community abounds in unfounded rumors oriented, demographic in content. As Sykes has
and it is not too unlikely that some inmates might so aptly stated:
create a fictional story of an impending break or
other violation to test the promised confidence of "In the past criminology has been often a borrower
the researcher. The skilled prison interviewer but seldom a lender, as far as a theory of human be-
should act very cautiously on such information. If havior is concerned. It has drawn heavily on the dis-
men are really planning a break or a riot it seems ciplines of psychology, sociology, jurisprudence, and
unlikely that an interviewer would be told, cer- so on, in order to solve its questions. It has rarely con-
tainly not at the beginning of the study before any tributed original propositions or substantiating em-
rapport has a chance to develop. Reporting such pirical studies to the social sciences. As a result the
criminologist has become somewhat isolated from the
fictional information to prison authorities would
main body of social theory and research; and the study
undoubtedly seriously damage the research project. of crime, in spite of the inherent interest of the subject
Ultimately, however, the researcher must make matter, is in danger of becoming a dull parade of un-
each decision as the case arises and while he does attached facts."' 4
not have the immunity of the confessional, at the
same time he has certain obligations to his own Carefully constructed research projects and
scientific study, and one of these is keeping infor- skillfully conducted in-prison interviewing can do
mation confidential within all reason. much to lessen this danger.
CRIMINOLOGY AND IN-PRISON INTERVIEWNG 11DONALD R. TAFT, CRIMINOLOGY, New York, New
Criminology, as a special field within the gen- York: The Macmillan Company, 1956, p 20.
" G.EsnAm M. SYrcEs, CRam An SocrTY, New
eral area of social science, is concerned with many York, New York: Random House, 1956, pp 115-116.

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